The blank pages of Uganda's independent press speak louder than any headline. Army chief General Muhoozi Kainerugaba has ordered the closure of four leading media houses, including Daily Monitor and Nile TV. The tanks rolled up at dawn. Guards now stand at empty newsrooms.
This is a direct assault on the Fourth Estate. The British government called it out within hours. A Foreign Office statement labelled the move 'an unacceptable attack on media freedom.' But diplomats know: words rarely restore printing presses.
Westminster's Africa committee is stirring. Labour MP and chair Sarah Champion has demanded immediate sanctions. No word yet from Number 10 on specific measures. The Foreign Secretary is due to make a statement this afternoon. Expect condemnation. Expect calls for dialogue. Expect little else.
Kainerugaba, son of President Museveni, has long loathed the press. His Twitter account, since deleted, once ran a poll on how to handle 'enemies.' Now we have the answer.
Behind closed doors, Downing Street fears a domino effect. Rwanda, Ethiopia, Kenya all watching. If Uganda gets away with this, others will follow. But sanctions hurt donors too. Trade, aid, military cooperation all on the table. The calculus is brutal.
Backbenchers are restless. They want action, not statements. The Foreign Secretary faces a tricky Commons grilling tomorrow. This could be a classic Westminster flashpoint: principled outrage versus strategic caution.
Meanwhile, Kampala's journalists are in hiding. Some fled to the bush. Others await arrest. Their crime was simply doing their jobs.
One leak from Whitehall: the British High Commissioner to Uganda has been summoned for an urgent meeting with the Foreign Office. Expect a dressing down. But will it change anything?
This is a bleak day for press freedom. The game is being played. And for now, the military has the winning hand.








